Monday, January 16, 2006

Looking into the long past

Over the Christmas break I worked on digitizing the family tree. It was quite interesting work, apparently my family from Liam goes back twenty nine generations. From the fourteenth generation on there was detailed description of birth day on the Chinese lunar calendar, birth year under which emperor's rule, marital status, sons born, and when they died. I know that at least the family goes back to the Qing Dynasty but what my parents have is only a copy of the cliftnotes version of the actual family history, apparently there is an entire box of books with family history somewhere out there my father believes with one of the uncles.

My parents want to at least scan in the documents so that there will be a record somewhere in case the paper copy disappears. I want to do one better, I want to do as through a genealogists work up with a computer program so that we can have a more meaningful understanding of where and when my ancestors existed. Also I would like to have that genealogy reach to the modern generation of Yeung/Young family members (the east coast are spelled Ye/the west coast are spelled Yo). My father is one of ten children and from looking in the history my grandfather had the largest family in history. My grandfather and grandmother had 6 sons and ironically of those six sons only three of those sons had male children, which would make it my generation there are in total four male children who carry the family name, two already have children, myself and a cousin in California who is the son of my fifth uncle. My cousin Gene who is not really into making a family, and my brother Marvin. I would love to see the Yeung family name carried on to future generations.

Of course there are a number of problems in finding a genealogy program for recording the family history.
  1. That is all of my ancestors had Chinese names, therefore any software I use must be able to support Chinese characters if nothing else just for their names.
  2. I want to use a program that will exist for years and generations to come so I need a program that will be continued to be upgraded for a long time.
  3. I don't really know enough Chinese to do justice for my ancestor's history.
I have been looking for a software that will do family trees but the only one that I have a sustained interest is Personal Ancestral File which is published by the Church of the Latter Day Saints. I do not agree with the beliefs and practices of the Mormon church, but the thing that they do well is genealogy, I know that this software will be supported for years to come since they have a fascination with genealogy.

It is somewhat humbling to realize that I am part of a much larger family, a family that has history that goes into the past for hundreds of years, that has survived war, plague, and hardship that are inconceivable today. I look at Liam and hope that he will help carry the family name for generations to come. On the other hand I hope there will be a world for Liam's children and his children's children to inhabit. I fear that humanity may have reached its peak, I fear that life will become increasingly harder, our resources depleting, the rise of extremism all around the world. I fear that within 30 generations humanity will cease to matter because we would have choked ourselves out of the picture with war and or pollution.

I hope that thirty generations from now some one like me is pondering the same questions as they try to create or update a family history for the Yeung family.

Garvin, its nice to meet you my name is Garvin

When I post enteries on the blog I often click on the Next Blog button and scan for interesting blogs to read while I perculate my thoughts. Well tonight I stumbled upon GARVIN. From scanning his blog and reading his profile I find some interesting similarities between us.

  1. He is Canadian and I was born in Canada.
  2. He is Chinese or of Chinese heritage and I am also Chinese.
  3. He likes pho and I like pho.
  4. He is an Aries and I am and Aries also.
  5. He is a technophile and I am a technophile.
  6. He dislikes the Bush Whitehouse, I also dislike the Bush Whitehouse.
I emailed him, I hope that he writes back.

What a strange little world.

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

The Christmas Plague

I love teaching; there are very few jobs where you can have Christmas and New Years off and all the days in between. The trade off of course is that when you are teaching the rest of the year you do not have a life.
I have been working myself too hard in December. It seems for me work doubles when I am preparing for time off, you know tying up loose ends, grading everything and so on. So naturally when I have some down time I get sick, almost no fail. I started feeling unwell Saturday the 24th and by Christmas I got full blown sick, coughing, feeling like you cannot breathe because you are so congested, ears clogged, sinuses hurting because you are stuffed up.
I should have known something was coming up when my ears felt like something were inside them on Wednesday the 20th. As usual I went on, and kept going on and on.
My parents arrived Friday Dec 23rd, of course Ahmie and I spent all day cleaning preparing for my parents visit. It was not too bad mess wise, we are settling in our apartment and much of our things have a place. They came on Greyhound and arrived about 7 in the morning, I picked them up and showed them a little bit of Cleveland, and where I work. Liam slept in that morning and Ahmie and I got a chance to chat with my parents, which was nice, and Liam had a chance to sleep well and greeted his grandparents (nai-nai, and yeh-yeh) with bright eyes and full of cheer. It has been several months since Liam has seen them. Later that day we went out for Dim sum at C & Y Chinese restaurant. We also invited our friends from church Serena, Jasmine (who returned from her first semester at college), Carlos and Sharon (Serena's parents). The food was wonderful; it was interesting having dim sum with two vegetarians. They do have some excellent dim-sum dishes for vegetarians. Afterwards we did some shopping for Asian goods.

We decided to lay low for the rest of Friday and Saturday to have a nice dinner, relax and enjoy each other's company. Saturday night we attended the Christmas Eve service at Westshore. Saturday night we enjoyed a delicious turkey (which started the week of turkey leftovers, turkey soup, turkey lo-mien, turkey fried rice and so on). Sunday we opened our Christmas gifts before church. I started feeling unwell Sunday morning, my throat started getting horse before church, however I was convinced to do a reading that morning and apparently I did some justice to the piece even though my voice was a little horse. I got to feeling really unwell Sunday afternoon, I had to sleep a little bit and I really felt sick.
I felt unwell until Wednesday, which meant I could not participate in the usual after Christmas bonanza of clearance deals, probably a good thing. Of course Wednesday was when I went to see my doctor. The doctor gave me a prescription for antibiotics, and a steroid/
broncodialator for my cold and chest congestion. I started feeling better almost right away.


Starting Thursday I worked on scanning in some family documents for my Dad. By then everyone at the apartment was feeling a little under the weather except my Mom. Ahmie and Liam had a bit of a cough, and dad was coughing also. None of them got as bad as I did.


My parents returned to New York on Sunday night and it was a very long but enjoyable visit from my parents.

Christmas Service

Even though I was feeling sick on Christmas day, my parents and my family all went to church on Christmas day. The service was very interesting, the congregants were asked to share something with the congregation, which was very nice. I was asked to do a reading for a fellow church member; I was told that he could not read what he wanted to share with out getting very choked up. I agreed to do so even though my throat was full of phlegm and my voice seems to be on the verge of going.

I got the reading, it was titled Christmas at Aunt Ida's by Dick Feagler who is a long time columnist at the Cleveland Plain Dealer. I read the column twice before I read it aloud before the congregation. I was very moved by this piece, since I am so moved I would like to share this to the readers of this blog out there in the blogsphere.

Christmas at Aunt Ida's

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Dick Feagler

Plain Dealer Columnist

With a nod by Dick Feagler to the issues of today, we republish his Christmas column, which first appeared in The Plain Dealer in 1993.

On Christmas, when I was a kid, we all went over to my Aunt Ida's house -- an old house in the old neighborhood.

Just what did you think I was going to do today? Talk about politics? The chaos and uncertainties of Iraq? All of our fellow Americans who dream of a white Christmas but see one the color of sand? All of the fears and uncertainties that lie before us? Not today, my friend. No fears today. Not on the day when an angel once said, "Fear not!"

Let us rest our weary brains. Let us consider matters more lasting than the day's headlines. Let us turn our backs on all earthbound dramas and traumas. Let us ignore notorious tyrants made famous in headlines for their infamy. Let us visit some people whose names get into the newspaper only when they die. And even then, just in the tiny type of the death notices.

Let's go to my Aunt Ida's house. Come on. It'll only take a couple of minutes.

You'll be home in time for the 11 o'clock news, I promise you.

The house wasn't far from the steel mills, and the fallout from the mills made the dirt in Aunt Ida's yard black and rich. When the wind was wrong, the air in the neighborhood smelled like a chem lab. Breathing it might have been bad, but nobody knew that then. My Aunt Ida had great luck with flowers.

On Christmas, we'd all be there. The old folks, the young folks and the kids. The young folks were the young men and their wives still recovering from the great upheaval of World War II. The old folks could remember World War I.

The kids, like me, weren't old enough to remember much. We were busy collecting memories, and this is one of them.

There was no TV. The only one among us who had a TV was my cousin Stanley, who sold them. He hasn't yet sold one to any of the rest of the family, but he keeps trying. He knows it's only a matter of time. For, what isn't?

"I have a 10-inch screen," he tells us, a cigar stuck in the corner of his mouth, a tall brown beer bottle at his elbow. He's sitting at the dining room table with the rest of the young men, playing pinochle. You'll notice that they have all, just for a little while, assumed the present tense. A Christmas present tense.

"They are never going to be able to make a screen bigger than 10 inches that will give you a decent picture," Cousin Stanley lectures. "According to the laws of electronics, 10 inches is as big as you can go."

The Army Air Corps gave Cousin Stanley a job fixing radios. That's where he got his electronic knowledge. So my Uncle Ziggy, who flushed out snipers on Okinawa, and my Cousin Melvin, who knocked out tanks in Italy, listen to Stanley with respect. Stanley - the trumpeter of the dawn of the age of television.

By now, the tiny type has recorded Stanley's name. And Ziggy's. Melvin's, too. And my Aunt Ida's. Time killed them. The tanks couldn't do it and the snipers couldn't do it. But Time? It does it every time.

Time erased my cousin Billy's name. He crossed the Rhine River in the bloody, final act of his war. He lived through obscene and notorious battlefields. He died at 85 cutting wood in his front yard in Parma.

Time is the inevitable eraser, but it does not erase cleanly. If you look hard enough, you can still see traces of them all, faintly. And if you look even harder - why they are right here!

The women are gathered in the living room, talking about babies and recipes and operations. Nylon stockings that have come back again, so you can throw the leg makeup away. Electric stoves that practically cook your meal for you. Jobs they can quit now - are expected to quit now - because the men have come back from the war.

Their woman talk would make a feminist despair. They talk of "female trouble" and permanent waves. And the Christmas crowds at Halle's and Taylor's and Bailey's. And the big Sterling-Lindner tree that looked even a little bigger this year. And Hough bake shop cookies. And trolley cars that turn on Public Square, showering the safety zones with a blizzard of sparks.

Jay Leno is not here. I told you, there is no television set, except the one Stanley is describing - sketching it in the air with the smoke from his cigar. Nobody has bothered to turn the radio on. There is just talk - endless, trivial, sometimes mysterious. Sometimes, if a kid comes into the room, the talk suddenly stops. "Ix-nay," one of the aunts will say. "Little pitchers have big ears." There are things, in this long-ago time, that a kid is not supposed to know about. If for some unfathomable reason anybody said the word "condom," it would take the room an hour to recover its equilibrium.

Where are the kids? Would you mind, my friend, if I went in search of myself? It won't take long. I know just where to look.

I am with my cousins in the unheated bedroom at the back of the old house. We are burrowing under the piles of coats that have been dumped on the bed. Moutons, mostly, with a few Persian lambs, for animals do not yet have rights. Just a glimpse of myself is all I want. I don't want to look too hard. Because for me, this trip is a wistful mirror.

The bedroom door opens and Aunt Ida is standing in a rectangle of light.

"You kids go into the living room now," she says. "Santa Claus is coming soon."

We go. And as soon as we leave, Aunt Ida opens a bureau drawer, reaches under some flannel sheets and pulls out a moth-eaten Santa Claus suit and a scraggly beard. The pants of this suit have long since disintegrated. So my Aunt Ida hikes up her dress and yanks on a pair of my uncle's blue serge pants. Over these she tugs galoshes.

She takes a pillow from the bed and plucks off the pillowcase. She stuffs the pillow under the Santa jacket to give herself a tummy. She fills the pillowcase with toys from Woolworth's, Kresge's and Grant's She puts on the beard, the cap. She tiptoes out into the hall. Then out the back door and into the night - air so cold it makes her nose sting, sky lit with a faint glow from the mills.

Around the house she goes and up on the side porch. She pauses and peeks in the window.

She sees what we see now. Me at 7. My young, handsome father and pretty mother.

(Death took my mother gently, during a nap. My father followed her the next year. But memory brings them back now, and makes them young again.)

On the frosty porch, my Aunt Ida sees us all - the old folks, the young folks and the kids. Moving, though we can't feel the current, down a river of time.

We don't see her. She is on the other side of the dark windowpane. The adults know she's out there. We kids aren't sure. It's a moment of great suspense for us. We are not yet old enough to understand that life is fairly predictable. That you can usually tell what will happen next. That there are only a handful of plots, endlessly repeated.

I promised I'd get you back. But let me take a last look into that room. Almost all of the people we see there are gone now. But they haven't gone far, and on Christmas they are very close. They are just the other side of the windowpane.

We can't see them. But we feel them there, those simple people who loved us and took care of us. They left us blessings we too rarely count. And, if we let them, they come back at Christmas with gifts of everlasting life.


The church member who could not read this himself I could only imagine that many of his family members are now on the other side of the windowpane and that he would like to be reconnected with those dear departed family members.

I was also very moved myself fortunately I never had to deal really with the passing of close family members except for my Uncle Joseph in 2004. I have been blessed with a child hood where nobody dies, nobody that matters, that is. I however saw myself in Dick Feagler's character and some day in the future thinking of resplendent Christmases of days gone by.

I know that my aunts and uncles will die someday, I know that my parents will die someday also however I hope that it will be far off from this Christmas, and many Christmases to come.

Saturday, December 31, 2005

T-minus 13 minutes

Well its about 13 minutes to 2006, thus far the evening has been nice. My parents, Ahmie, Liam and I went to a Chinese Buffet tonight. For this night we also made Tong Yun which are flour dumplings with sugar and (my father's favorite) peanut butter fillings, in a simple syrup broth. It was a family affair, Ahmie and my mom made the dumplings and I cooked the dumplings and made the syrup broth.

Still waiting for the ball to drop.
My resolutions for this coming year.
1. Get a better teaching job, time to start looking is in January.
2. Get our fiances in better order. (getting a better job helps)
3. Try to reach my students better (its going to be tough, I think resolutions are supposed to be hard)
4. Lose weight (currently I weigh about 210 lbs)

...5, 4, 3, 2, 1, open sesame, Happy New Year!
Have a Happy New Year! ...

Thursday, December 29, 2005

The past 3 months

I have been buried with work and have not been able to post nor compose anything at all. Work has been difficult at the school that I teach at, I hope this break will afford me the opportunity to reflect and refocus before the start of the second semester. When I return from Winter break I will have about two weeks before the start of the next semester. Work has been more anguishing and frustrating than uplifting and enlightening.


A regular work day starts for me goes like this
  1. 5:30 am, I get up, eat, get dressed, and out the door ideally by 6:30
    am.
  2. But I usually linger, watch some news, or drink a second cup of coffee and
    usually out around 6:45 am.
  3. 7:00-7:15 am, I get to work depending on traffic. I sit down turn
    on my laptop and print out my lessons for the day, go to the copier and make
    copies.
  4. 7:45 to 12:00 pm, I teach three 80 minute block classes.
  5. 12:00 to 12:25 pm is my actual lunch. Usually I am tidying my
    classroom for the next teacher.
  6. 12:25 to 1:45 pm is my planning block I try to be productive and spend most of
    that time grading or doing other small teaching tasks. Sometimes
    I just need to sit down and not be productive and relax
    from
    a bad morning of teaching.
  7. 1:50 to 3:10 pm is my last block class and is usually my best and most
    productive of the day.
  8. 3:10 to 4:00 pm is my planning time which I try to tidy the classroom and
    then try to organize for the next day. Sometimes students come in for
    extra help, sometimes I have students serve detention (which most don't show
    up). Perhaps talk with my coworkers on work related issues.
  9. 4:10-4:30 pm is usually when I leave for home.
  10. 4:30-5:00 pm is usually when I arrive home.
  11. 5:00 to 8:00 pm is unwind time with Ahmie and Liam, depending on if dinner
    is made or not 6-7 is spent cooking something edible.
  12. 8:00 to 12:00 pm or later is spent working on grading, writing lesson
    plans or class notes, powerpoint presentations.
  13. 5:30 pm wake up.
  14. Lather, Rinse, Repeat

Well at least I get the summers off right.

Monday, October 03, 2005

The nature of Love

I find myself thinking about love lately. I hear familiar refrains in my head as I think about this.
Love is a wonderful thing.
Love conquers all.
All you need is love, love is all you need.
Love is a letting go.
Love is all consuming.

What is the state of love in my life. I have to say this is mostly prompted by a letter written to me about a month ago by an old friend. This has prompted me to start getting back in touch with other old friends. In all honesty, I don't make friends easily. I am not the type of person who makes casual aquintances. The friends that I make I keep for life. What I mean by that is friends to me are like books. I have a story of friendship between my friend and I, sometimes we get out of touch and the book goes on a bookshelf. Time and distance does not diminish the stories in a book, nor does it diminish the value of my friendships. All I have to do is pick up my friendships back up, blow the dust off and I pick up where I left off some time ago.

But I digress.

I have been thinking about love lately. I find that I have an almost unbareable love for my son Liam. Not that it is difficult to love my son, but rather the depth of the love that I feel for him is as deep as and wide as the ocean. I know that Liam is a beautiful and very cute child. However my love for him is beyond the physical.
When I come home from work I cannot wait to see Liam, I find it hard to shake out of my work clothes then spend time with him. Half the time I will hold him closely after my arms are free to pick him up and hug him. My love for him is so great that I feel what he feels, my heart fills with joy when he is happy, and laughing. My heart hurts when he has a cry of anguish or pain. I know now that I am a big part of Liam's world. I am his Sun or Moon that revolove around him and help solve his needs.
I know that someday I will not have the sway over him as I do now. It pains me to know that he will grow up someday and not love me as overwhelmingly as he does now.
I know that all things change and that this is a natural part of life which gives life meaning. However this does not mean I will stop loving my son so very full heartedly, enjoying every step especialy now.

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Transience Update

Carol called me this weekend and told me that she got a job teaching in Chicago, considering it seems that Carol had to make a major life change to move with her partner Heidi to Chicago. I am glad that she is now teaching and in a good job at a Magnet school. From what she described to me it seems to be a cake job.

Best wishes and good luck on your new teaching job, Carol.

Liam's Kisses

Well Liam has finally learned how to kiss other people with his mouth closed and not biting when kissing other people, or at least to Ahmie and I he has been kissing us or giving his cheek for a kiss. Liam is a very affectionate child but it seems that he has a taste for human flesh. So it is horrible when he plays with other children, or the one time Ahmie and I had left Liam at Church daycare for service Liam climbed on top of another young child and bit him in the cheek and cause the other kid to bleed when the daycare volunteer was not looking. So I almost always take Liam to the daycare area of our church and often miss the service and sermon because our church is currently undergoing major renovation. I have to watch him like a hawk to make sure that he is not patting other children too hard nor will he get the opportunity to bite other children when he tries to hug them.

The frustrating thing about all of this is that Liam is a sweet and affectionate child but he intimidates other children even ones that are older then him by a year or so. This is mostly because he has the tendency to pat hard or bite when he hugs and kisses.

Sorry Carol, I guess when Liam sees you next he won't be a horrible boyfriend to you and bite you in both cheeks when you pick him up.

Saturday, September 10, 2005

Transience is a constant

One of my favorite essays was titled Eros and Thanatos (a new refutation of), now this essay was from my senior year Lit magazine Opus. The essay talked of Love and how Love transcends time and is immortal, those not in Love is in a transitory universe going from moment to moment. Yes, seems quite melodramatic. However, parts of the essay is stuck to my mind like really thick peanut butter.

With apologies to Tara Baltazar
In the sixth grade I thought I'd kill myself over a fight with my mother. Today, I can't remember the fight. In this age I am seeing someone. Twenty years from now someone will only be marked by time and place. Nineteen ninety-five, East Village. A photograph may remember.
excerpt from Eros and Thanatos (a new refutation of)

My friends Carol and Heidi are moving to Chicago today and I will miss them. I remember Heidi from one of my first times visiting the Westshore Unitarian universalist Church in Rocky River, Ohio. I did not remember what the sermon was about by I was struck when she came up to the podium and talked about how her partner (Carol) and her lives were set and seemed to be smooth going and then both she and Carol lost their jobs and how frightful this experience was. Heidi ended with a different job as a social worker, and Carol was continued at her teaching job despite being laid off earlier in the summer. I think that Ahmie and I approached Heidi after that service and introduced ourselves.

That was the start of a beautiful friendship. Now Carol and Heidi are all packed up their apartment is mostly empty except for some trash that needs to be tidied. Heidi is going to seminary school in Chicago training to be an Unitarian universalist (UU) minister. Carol is going with her and trying to find work there.

I feel a strong urge to wake up early in the morning an make sure I take a picture of Carol and Heidi before they drive off.

Two Thousand and Five, Lakewood. A photograph may remember.

Sunday, August 28, 2005

My Rejection letters

Well I did get the job with both the Summit Academies, and with Hope High School. I ended up taking the job with Hope High because they offered me $31,000 which was less than I had wanted but not as low as the joke of an offer from Summit Academies which was $27,000 with no acknowledgement of my teaching experience.

For prosperity I will attach in this post all the rejection e-mails that I received from my Spring and Summer of applying for teaching jobs.

I'm posting my rejection e-mails in reverse chronological order.

This was the rejection letter from Lakewood Schools for a High School Science Teacher position.


July 5, 2005


Dear Candidate:

Thank you for your interest in the Science Teacher position at Lakewood High School. We were fortunate to have a number of outstanding candidates interview for this position.

After careful consideration, the position have been offered to and accepted by another applicant.

Once again, thank you for your interest.

Sincerely,

JoAnn M. Berkowitz
Director of Personnel

JMB/kr


Here is rejection letter from Lakewood for a Middle School Science teaching position.

July 5, 2005



Dear Candidate:

Thank you for your interest in the Middle School Science Teacher position at Emerson Middle School. We were fortunate to have a number of outstanding candidates interview for this position.

After careful consideration, the position have been offered to and accepted by another applicant.

Once again, thank you for your interest.

Sincerely,

JoAnn M. Berkowitz
Director of Personnel

JMB/kr




This is a letter of rejection from the Lorain County Joint Vocational School for a Science Instructor position, this was dated July 20th.

Thank you for taking the time to apply for the position of Science Instructor. We were impressed with your qualifications and experiences. I must tell you, we have concluded our search for this position and have offered the job to another applicant.

Please keep us in mind when considering employment opportunities in the future. Thanks again for your interest in the Lorain County Joint Vocational School.

Sincerely,
Michael S. Larson
Assistant Superintendent


This is a letter of rejection from Cleveland Heights-University Heights Public Schools for a Substitute Teaching Position, this was dated Aug 11th.

Job Posting: Substitute Positions - Daily - for Teachers / Educational Aides / Other Professional Positions
Posting ID: POS20040805000001
Location: Board of Education

This position has been filled. Thank you for applying and please feel free to apply for other positions in the District for which you are properly qualified.


This is another letter of rejection from Lorain County Joint Vocational School for an Alternative Learning Monitor (In-house Suspension Teacher), this was dated Aug 23rd.

Thank you for taking the time to apply for the position of Alternative Learning Monitor. We were impressed with your qualifications and experiences. I must tell you, we have concluded our search for this position and have offered the job to another applicant.

Please keep us in mind when considering employment opportunities in the future. Thanks again for your interest in the Lorain County Joint Vocational School.


Granted I applied for way more than five positions over this past spring and summer. However I believe that the school systems should a least give the meager courtesy of notifying potential applicants about their rejection instead of not communicating at all. I applied for many positions over the Ohio State Department of Education's Online Job database. Basically the schools just log on to the database and pull the applicants that they saw had applied. I cannot imagine that it would be very difficult to pull the names an e-mails of applicants an make a mail merge to send out a mass email of rejection.

Even though the letters of rejection above were generic and canned. I applaud them for having the common courtesy of replying back to me with a rejection letter.

Thursday, August 18, 2005

Been holding my breath

Well its been a while since my last post, about eight months I think. Not to say that there has not been very eventful things happening in my life. Much has happened; Liam spoke his first words, walked his first steps, had his first birthday, and endured his first Harry Potter Book release party in these short months.


Don't you love Google Maps? Posted by Picasa

To talk about where I live. Now I live in Lakewood Ohio in a nice and quiet neighborhood. We have lived here since May of 2005. We had to move out of the "Murder House" in February because our new neighbors were very abhorrent people who I don't feel like describing right now. They were so bad that we had to move ASAP when they moved in at the end of January. Let just say the fact that they moved in at 1am was the least bad thing we had an issue with. We then moved with the help of our friends Katie, Carol, Heidi, KC, Tim, Andy, and again with a lot of muscle from my brother Marvin. We moved our stuff to a self store, Ahmie's uncle's basement, her mom's storage area, and the bulk of stuff we moved to our friend Jenny and her baby's daddy's house in Cleveland Heights Ohio. This was not too bad we thought but it was tough to live without our own kitchen and on the third floor. It was just plain tough to cramp ourselves into the attic of her house. During our stay March to May my parents visited we were hoping to buy a house but the deal fell through and we decided to look for a place to live in Lakewood, we spent several weekends looking for an duplex before settling for a duplex on the same street as our friends Carol and Heidi. As you may have guessed we are still trying to "settle" into our apartment.

Working has been tough in the past eight months, I lost my QMRP (assistant manager) twice. The first one quit on me, and I said don't let the door slam on your ass on your way out; good riddance. The second QMRP I have her name is Maria Hisey, and I loved working with her she was my brain twin and was a really good QMRP. I believe she started working with me in February. We worked through some tough times but in May she was promoted to being the Manager in charge of the Supported Living division of my company NCC. I could not have been happier that she was promoted to this demanding position because she is very talented and this will suit her personality. But, I was sad and upset that I was finally ready to really work well with her and Susan our nurse as a management team and then she was tapped for this important position in our company. She is thoroughly challenged in her new position and I don't think she has ever met a challenge that she cannot conquer. Every now and then I talk to her and ask how she is doing she does have very much in her hands. She seems tired I hope that she is doing okay with work and her family, granted her children are all older, but it is tough to juggle work and home.

But, I digress.

Since the end of May I have been running Royalton House by myself and have been working very many long and hard hours to make sure things are done. Staffing has been okay but I had certain responsibilities that I could not delegate to others and thus ended up working many weeks for 50-60 hours. Since I did not have a second person at the house I ended up being on-call for over 2 and a half months. I have gotten to the point where I cringe upon hearing the work cell phone ring. All of this has caused much strain in my relationship with Ahmie. I know that I should be better with her. I feel that I am running all the time from home to work, running circles at work, and run back home where I try to take care of Liam and cook and other stuff. But by the end of the day I don't feel like anything. When I wake up in the morning I don't feel like doing anything, I don't want to go to work. Some days I spend at work plunged in deep despair, feeling trapped in this job. Some times I just stare at the walls or mindlessly surfing the web because I don't seem to be motivated to do much more than that. But I manage to do what keeps the house afloat but I did not have energy to expand my presence at work. I now have a third QMRP and his name is Charles Hester and of the 3 QMRPs that I have had Charles by far is more experienced then my other two QMRPs. I hope that he and I will have a good collaborative relationship. Although I hope Charles can tolerate a good surprise.

What about teaching?

Good Question. Cleveland has been a very difficult market for finding work as a teacher. Especially with companies leaving and school levies failing and the state of Ohio not able to properly fund its school districts, makes the Cleveland area a tough teacher market. I have tried since April to apply for various positions for local school districts, they take my applications but don't call back. This is tough for me. I found that being a teacher is my calling and really ingrained into the definition of who I am. It is hard for me to check websites for teaching jobs, applying for them and not get any response, or follow up and find that the position was already filled, but I get the "Check back with us there might be more positions opening up later". I was pretty ready to give up when Ahmie found several ads for teaching positions at local area Charter Schools, and a school for a Juvenile Correctional facility.

The first place I interviewed at was for the teaching position at the Juvenile Correctional Facility. It was an interesting experience walking into jail and having to walk through a metal detector but the job was interesting, but the job was a all year gig for 35,000 which was not so great when you factor the fact that you will teach or be at "school" all year. It required 3 weeks of training in Columbus which would be too much time away from Ahmie and Liam.
The second interview was for a position with Summit Academy for a position in Parma Ohio, which would not be too far of a drive. The school was interesting because Boy Scouting is used as a character development part to its curriculum, but the pay was really bad 27,000 and they did not count my teaching experience outside of their school so forget them.
The third interview was for a position with Hope High which is part of White Hat Management group of EMO's (think HMO for education). This job is in downtown Cleveland they gave me a range of pay between 28-32,000 and I will be teaching in a newly renovated building with new equipment, all of which excites me, and includes some off site training for some of the science teaching equipment which really excites me. The Principle Mr. Longino was very interested in hiring me, but he needed to process my file with his HR department. Unfortunately he did not submit the paperwork until Monday morning and has to wait for HR to finish their background check stuff before a job offer can be made. So I have been waiting for almost a week and I guess I don't have the patience at this time to be cool and calculating about this. I hope I will get the contract on Friday, because school starts on next Thursday.

It has been tough this summer for me, between work stress and the stress of trying to find a teaching job. I feel like a double agent, sneaking away time to work on my portfolio, filling out applications, sneaking time out to talk to schools and interviewing. But this last week I feel like I am barely breathing, holding my breath wishing for some change.

Wednesday, December 29, 2004

Winter Holiday Review

Well my parents and my brother Marvin are on their way home to New York right now. For the past week and a half my parents have been visiting with us in Cleveland. It has been an eventful week and a half with lots of snow and lots of my parents enjoying time getting to know Liam. But let me digress, the Winter Holiday really started almost 2 weeks ago.

Two weeks ago we visited New York for my Uncle Peter's 70th birthday celebration, which was really nice since last month we saw the passing of my uncle Joseph who was the older brother to both my uncle Peter and my Father. We also visited my aunt Pat and my cousins Gene and Wendy. On Monday the 20th Ahmie and I drove back to Cleveland with my parents for a visit. (We have been preparing for several weeks for this visit house wise at least.) My brother had finals that week and did not come to Cleveland until Thursday of that week. Of course Cleveland had a huge snow storm that week and we were buried under a foot and a half of wet snow. I did not spend as much time as I would have liked with my parents because I had to work. I spent half of Christmas day sleeping because I had to work a 3rd shift at work, which was not great.

Fast forward to today I took the day off so that I could spend time with my parents and get some family pictures taken.

As I'm closing the post now my parents are just boarding the bus back to New York from Cleveland leaving from gate 7 and will arrive in New York at 9 am.

Monday, December 06, 2004

Liam's first taste of Christmas


MMM... Santa tastes different. Posted by Hello

This picture was taken at my company's children's Christmas party where they had a Santa to pose with the children. The santa was good, his beard was real. Bogged with work, hopefully more to come soon

Monday, November 22, 2004

Heres to you Uncle Joe

In diapers -- report cards
In spoke wheels -- in speeding tickets
In contracts -- dollars
In funerals -- in births
In -- five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred minutes
How do you figure
A last year on earth?
-"Seasons Of Love B" by Jonathan Larson


My uncle Joseph died last Wednesday. He had turned eighty years old this past July, we had just moved to Ohio and Liam was just too young to go to New York to see him. I learned about his passing last Friday.

Other than my uncle Peter, uncle Joseph was one of the few uncles that I can actually say I had regularly talked with and got to know a little. My father was 9th of 10 children so my father's side of the family is huge. He lived around Toronto Canada with my aunt.

Sadly we never brought Liam to see Uncle Joseph when he was in New York for his eightieth birthday. When I heard from my mom that he had passed. The news hit me like a stack of bricks. This really reminded me of the mortality of my parents. I know that my grandmother lived to her eighties so I know that most of my family is fairly long lived but I hope my father will live long enough to see Liam and his siblings grow up and maybe marry and have children, so my dad who is now 65 will have to live to at least his 90's. I hope that he will be around that long.

To mourn my uncle's passing I have for every night until when he will be buried (November 29) I pour wine, burn inscents, and leave food as an offering for my uncle. I say a prayer for his passing. I do all this for my own peace of mind, mourning rituals to me is for the living, it gives people a time and a way to deal with the death that wait for us all. It gives us a way to transform the pain and loss into something else something less scary. Since I can't be there for his funeral I can at least do this to mourn him.

"To everything
(Turn, turn, turn)
There is a season
(Turn, turn, turn)
And a time to every purpose
Under Heaven

A time to be born, a time to die
A time to plant, a time to reap
A time to kill, a time to heal
A time to laugh, a time to weep..."
"Turn Turn Turn (There is a season)" by Pete Seeger


We are all part of a cycle as some are born some must die. As I was overjoyed by the birth of Liam, I am sad for the passing of my uncle Joseph and I guess that is the way it has always been.

Friday, November 05, 2004

The Week that never ends!

Monday: November 1st

Day started pretty much ok not much done at work, caught up on paper work from my Friday off. Had a nice weekend with Sabrina and Eric when they visited this past weekend for Ahmie and My 5 year wedding anniversary.

Tuesday: November 2nd

Woke up at 8am and got dressed and ready to go vote. Got a phone call saying that the Medicaid Surveyor was at the house to do the annual inspection and asked me to come ASAP. So Ahmie and I went to our polling place and voted, unlike many other polling places around Cleveland our polling location had a short wait, 10 minutes or so when we were there voting. Got back home from voting and went to work.

Anxiously driving to work because the Surveyor comes once a year to inspect the operation of the house that I manage. If we don't do things "right" according to the standards set in the Medicaid standards I run the risk of being cited for deficiencies. Which requires action on my part to correct the deficiencies and so on. Plus my boss does not like the managers to have too many deficiencies from surveyors. The Medicaid surveyors have the right to pull funding from a place that they visit if there are too many problems seen. But this is only reserved for major problems, or not correcting problems identified.

I was anxious because we have not started preparing for the survey, I was hoping that we would start this week to prepare for this. I was about half way to work when I noticed that my car was running very hot as in line beyond the red in the temperature gauge. So I stopped the car at the first parking lot I could and looked under the hood. Some steam came out and I did not see anything out of place. So I let the car cool for 10-15 minutes and started the car again. This time the car heated up very quickly again. I was thinking "great', exactly what I need on the day of my first Medicaid survey. So I stopped at the first strip mall I found and called Ahmie about the problem. Then I called my boss Jessie and he said that he would pick me up. When I got there at about 11am, everything was pretty settled, the surveyor was going through the books. Ahmie and her mom were helping me with the car. Cindy was driving the car to Polaris Career Center to get it looked at.

Through the afternoon it went pretty well, another surveyor came and did an inspection of the facility. I got cited on a facility issue which is beyond my control, so I am not so worried. The other surveyor stayed and observed dinner and had some suggestions for the staff. Ahmie picked me up at 7.

But before that I was "initated" by Floyd who was an employee of mine. The staff have been talking about giving me an "imitation" for a week or two, so I knew it was coming. I got shaving creamed. Yes it was a little embarrassing, but I think the staff will have something interesting to talk about. I think little things like that strengthen work morale. (picture to post soon).

Coming home I took our old car (92 Saturn) home. We had given the car to our friend Libby and her daughter Katie. However neither Libby nor Katie took care of the car and in the end they did not want it. So Cindy and I took the car back Monday night.
When we got home we were glued to the election coverage. I stayed up past midnight knowing that we had little chance of having a Shrub free presidency for the next four years.

Wednesday: November 3rd
Woke up at 4 am to go to work. Rolled into work at 5 to be there for the Surveyor for her observations. For the most part the rest of the day was uneventful from the Survey. We had the exit interview at about 3 pm and I did not get any citations! Yes! After the exit interview I went home.

Ahmie had the bush blues after hearing Kerry's concession speech and was enraged that her mom voted for the Shrub. She was enraged because the whole reason that swayed Cindy's vote was a political cartoon of Kerry.

Ok enough for this post!

Sunday, October 31, 2004

Halloween Fun


Halloween Costumes Posted by Hello

Here is a picture of us at church today. We were asked to dress up for the service although I spent most of it preparing food in the kitchen for the pot luck after the service. Liam was dressed up as a monkey, Ahmie was dressed up as a tree, and I was dressed up as the scariest thing I can think of ... (gasp) ... a ... Republican. It was so scary I could not bear to wear the home made button saying (Bush,Cheney 04) although if you read carefully it also said www.factcheck.com underneath.

The explanation is this, Liam is a monkey. Ahmie is a tree that nourishes the monkey, in fact the costume has a flap that allows Liam access to breastfeed. I am a republican who is interested in having the tree chopped down because Ahmie is an old growth tree, and am willing to allow it to be chopped down for pennies with no thought about the consequences. Scary huh.

This evening Ahmie, Liam and I went trick or treating unfortunately the pictures did not come out right. We walked around our street and trick or treated with Liam in my arms. Afterwards I manned the porch and gave candy to the neighborhood trick or treaters.

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

Liam is 5 months old today

Liam turned 5 months old today. After work this afternoon Ahmie, Liam and I went walking around Big Creek Park to enjoy a fleeting fall afternoon. Ahmie wanted to take some pictures of the park trails with the flaming foilage.


Father, Son and Mother Nature Posted by Hello

While walking around to find the paved walking path Ahmie took the picture above. He has grown so much in these five short months.

Saturday, October 23, 2004

Been too lazy to blog lately.

I have been very busy with my new position as House Manager at Royalton House and have been pulling average 50 hour weeks the past three weeks. So between all that work and the kingdom of loathing, I have been a little too lazy to write enteries.

But here are some pictures of Liam from the past 4 months, enjoy.

I like trees.


I like trees. Posted by Hello

Here is a picture of Liam behind a tree at church two weeks ago. Ahmie did not want to take a generic picure of Liam laying on the grass so we leaned Liam against the tree here and he stood pretty well.